Our naags have either dried or are drying. Many are almost dead. Now imagine Kashmir without its naags.
For centuries, naags were the invisible arteries of Kashmir’s civilization. Villages were established where springs existed. Fields were irrigated through channels fed by them. Entire communities depended on their reliable flow for drinking water. Even the cultural imagination of Kashmir drew from these springs – many were associated with shrines, saints, and sacred stories.
Now imagine the valley if these springs disappear.
The scenario is not merely environmental; it is existential. If naags vanish, Kashmir will slowly transform from a naturally watered valley into a region dependent entirely on artificial water systems. The consequences would be alarming. Rural drinking water sources would shrink. Streams that originate from springs would weaken. Agriculture would suffer as underground water tables decline. Villages that once relied on local springs would be forced to depend on tanker water and expensive infrastructure.
In some places, this future has already begun. That we don’t see this as a threat is our bad luck.
Across the valley, springs that once flowed throughout the year now run dry in summer. Some have been buried under construction. Others have become dumping sites for plastic and waste. In certain villages the stone basins remain as silent monuments to a water source that no longer exists. When a spring dies, it rarely returns easily; the underground channels that fed it may already be damaged beyond repair.
This is why the disappearance of naags should alarm every Kashmiri.
A valley that loses its springs loses something fundamental about its ecological balance. Springs are the natural outlets of underground aquifers. When they vanish, it often indicates that the groundwater recharge system – the hidden network of forests, soil layers, and mountain slopes that collect rain and snowmelt – is being disturbed.
The frightening truth is that many people notice the death of a spring only after it has already stopped flowing. By that time, restoration becomes difficult and expensive.
But the crisis is not beyond repair.
In fact, some of the most effective solutions do not require massive government projects or complex technology. Many steps can be taken immediately at the public and community level, if awareness and determination exist.
Immediate Actions the Public Can Take
The first step is protection of recharge zones. Every spring has an invisible catchment area where rainwater and snowmelt seep into the ground before emerging as a spring. When roads are cut, houses constructed, or soil heavily disturbed in these areas, the underground pathways feeding the spring collapse. Communities must identify these recharge zones and prevent unregulated construction there. One village head can identify recharge zones around the village.
The second urgent step is eliminating waste dumping near springs. Across Kashmir, plastic bags, bottles, and domestic waste are often thrown into or around spring basins. Such pollution blocks water outlets and contaminates the source. Villages can adopt simple rules prohibiting any dumping within a protective radius around the spring.
A third important measure is restoring vegetation around springs. Native trees and plants help retain soil moisture and allow rainwater to seep slowly into the ground. When slopes above springs are stripped of vegetation, water runs off quickly instead of recharging the aquifer. Community-led plantation drives using local species – such as willow, walnut, or chinar – can significantly improve the recharge process.
Equally vital is the physical restoration of spring structures. Many traditional stone basins and protective walls have collapsed or deteriorated over time. Repairing these structures prevents contamination and preserves the flow channels through which water emerges.
Communities can also organize annual “spring cleaning days.” During these events villagers remove accumulated silt, weeds, and debris from the spring basin and surrounding channels. Such simple maintenance often restores water flow that has been partially blocked.
Another critical step is preventing excessive groundwater extraction through borewells near traditional springs. Borewells can drain the same aquifers that feed the springs, causing them to dry up. Local village councils and community groups should regulate drilling in sensitive areas.
Perhaps the most powerful intervention is community ownership. When a spring belongs to everyone, it often ends up belonging to no one. Villages can create small committees responsible for monitoring the condition of each nag, reporting threats, and coordinating conservation activities.
Schools and youth groups can also play a transformative role. When children begin documenting and protecting local springs as part of environmental projects, awareness spreads quickly across the community.
The future of Kashmir’s naags will not be determined only by policies written in offices. It will depend on whether ordinary people recognize the urgency of the moment.
If the valley loses its springs, it will lose not only water but a vital element of its ecological wisdom and cultural memory. But if communities act now – protecting recharge zones, restoring vegetation, cleaning and maintaining spring basins – many of these ancient water sources can still be revived.
The choice is stark.
A Kashmir without naags would be a valley that has forgotten how its own landscape once sustained life. But a Kashmir that saves its springs will prove that even in an age of modern infrastructure, the oldest gifts of nature can still be protected – if people decide they must survive.


